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Trailing abutilon

Trailing abutilon

Abutilon megapotamicum
A tender, lax, semi-evergreen shrub from subtropical southern Brazil, grown for its distinctive pendent lantern flowers: an inflated bright-red calyx above pale-yellow petals, with a long dark maroon column of stamens dangling beneath. It is not hardy - hard frost kills the top growth - so outside mild, near-frost-free climates it is grown against a warm sunny wall, in a container brought under cover for winter, or as a conservatory plant. Where winters are gentle it flowers over a very long season, summer to autumn in temperate gardens and on and off nearly year-round in frost-free places. POWO (Kew) now files it under the accepted name Callianthe megapotamica, with Abutilon megapotamicum a synonym; it also goes by Brazilian bellflower, flowering maple, and Chinese lantern. The stems are scrambling rather than self-supporting, so it wants training or a place to cascade.
Climate fit: narrow (26/100)
Focal point
Pollinator
Container
Light
Full sun / Part shade
Water
Moderate water
Mature size
72-96" tall · 72" apart
Hardy in zones
8b-11b
frosty to nearly frost-free winters
Native in Illinois
No
The nectar-rich pendent lantern flowers are built for birds: in the Americas they are visited chiefly by hummingbirds, with bees and butterflies working them where present.

Cold hardiness

These values are location-based: this location's current hardiness is the baseline, and the 2050 value is a projected future climate for this same location.
Now
Zone 6b
Plotwright
USDA Zone 6b
-5°F to 0°F
Won't grow here
Zone 7a
Plotwright
0°F to 5°F
Won't grow here
In plain terms: This location has cold winters. Its winters are projected to keep warming through 2050.
Out of range today and still out of range in 2050.

Heat tolerance

Heat tolerance values are location-based too: heat days today are observed at this site, and the 2050 value projects this same location under a future climate.
Loading AHS heat-zone data for this location...

Plant this, not that

Better fit for this place
For Chicago, IL, these are replacement suggestions: similar plants with a stronger hardiness fit now and/or in 2050.
Hylotelephium 'Herbstfreude'
Autumn-joy stonecrop
A clump-forming herbaceous perennial grown for its showy late-season flower heads: masses of tiny star-like flowers borne in flattened cymes 3-6 inches across that emerge rosy pink, deepen to rose-red, and fade to coppery-rust as they die. Gray-green, fleshy, succulent-like leaves form upright clumps to about 2 feet. Easily grown in dry-to-medium, well-drained soil in full sun, it is drought tolerant and attracts butterflies, and its foliage and dead inflorescences persist into winter for added interest.
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 3a-9b
Climate: moderate
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Container
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Tagetes erecta
African marigold
A tall, bold warm-season annual from Mexico and Guatemala (the "African" name is a misnomer of its European garden history) grown for large, fully double, pompon-like flowerheads in saturated yellow, gold, and orange over strongly aromatic, finely divided foliage. Plants reach 12-48 inches and bloom from early summer to frost in full sun. The petals are edible and used as a culinary garnish and natural dye, and the flowers are the iconic "flor de muerto" of Mexican Day of the Dead. Despite the wide listed zone range it is frost-tender and grown for a single warm season.
Annual
Full sun / Part shade
Low water
Zones 2a-11b
Climate: moderate
Border
Focal point
Container
Pollinator
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Leucanthemum × superbum
Shasta daisy
The classic white-and-yellow garden daisy - a clump-forming herbaceous perennial bearing showy single flower heads of white ray florets around a yellow central disc from midsummer into fall. A garden hybrid bred by Luther Burbank in the 1890s near snow-covered Mt. Shasta in northern California, it grows 2-3 feet tall and is a mainstay of the perennial border, cottage garden, and cutting garden. Easily grown in dry-to-medium, well-drained soil in full sun, it is drought tolerant, attracts butterflies, and is resistant to deer and rabbit browsing.
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 5a-9b
Climate: moderate
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Container
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited
Hydrangea serrata
Mountain hydrangea
Mountain hydrangea is a compact, deciduous flowering shrub native to the mountainous regions of Japan and Korea, where it grows in cool, moist, partly shaded conditions - and that cool mountain origin is the honest catch. Hardy through USDA Zone 6 when dormant, the plant breaks dormancy early and its new spring growth is reliably vulnerable to late frosts; a single late freeze in April can destroy an entire season's bloom on wood that would otherwise flower in midsummer. It is smaller and more refined than bigleaf hydrangea, with serrated leaves and distinctive lacecap flowerheads in blue or pink depending on soil pH, making it a graceful focal point for partly shaded borders where consistent moisture can be maintained.
Shrub
Part sun / Part shade
Consistent moisture
Zones 6a-9b
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Border
Structure
Container
Pollinator
Better fit now and in 2050
Now: well-suited
2050: well-suited

Similar plants

Browse lateral options with similar roles, light needs, size, or native-range overlap; these are not filtered for a better climate fit.
Camellia sasanqua
Sasanqua camellia
Sasanqua camellia is an evergreen shrub native to the forests of southern Japan - Kyushu, Shikoku, and the Ryukyu Islands - where it grows on forest margins and hillsides. In gardens it is prized as the earliest-flowering camellia, bearing fragrant blooms from September through January when almost nothing else is in flower, and it tolerates more sun and drought than its cousin Camellia japonica. The honest catch is cold hardiness: open flowers are blackened by hard frost, and the plant itself is reliably hardy only from zone 7a south, making it unsuitable for much of the northeastern and midwestern United States without meaningful shelter.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 7a-9b
Climate: narrow
Border
Focal point
Structure
Container
Pollinator
Trachelospermum jasminoides
Star jasmine
Star jasmine is an evergreen woody climbing vine native to eastern and southeastern Asia - Japan, Korea, southern China, and Vietnam - where it twines into forest margins and scrub. In gardens it is prized for intensely fragrant pinwheel-shaped white flowers in late spring to early summer and year-round glossy foliage, earning the RHS Award of Garden Merit. The honest catch is hardiness: it is reliable only in USDA zones 8-11 (the RHS rates it H4, roughly -10 to -5C), so growers in zone 7 and colder face repeated dieback or outright loss in a hard winter, and in the warmest zones its vigour tips into aggressive coverage that can smother smaller plants.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 8a-11b
Climate: narrow
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
Container
Tecoma capensis
Cape honeysuckle
Cape honeysuckle (Tecoma capensis, syn. Tecomaria capensis; Bignoniaceae) is a vigorous, evergreen scrambling shrub native to southern and south-central Africa - from the Cape Provinces north through KwaZulu-Natal, Mozambique, Malawi, Tanzania, DR Congo, and Angola - valued for long, slender orange-to-apricot tubular flowers borne erratically across much of the year and attractive to nectar-feeding sunbirds. It reaches 2–3 m tall and wide as a free-standing mound, or considerably taller trained on a wall or trellis, and has received the RHS Award of Garden Merit. The honest catch is its frost-tenderness (barely survives to about 5°C; RHS H1C, roughly USDA 9b–11) combined with an invasive streak in mild climates: it suckers freely, self-layers, and has naturalised on the Azores and across coastal eastern Australia, so it must only be sited where its spread can be actively managed.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 9b-11
Climate: narrow
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Container
Tecomaria capensis
Cape honeysuckle
Cape honeysuckle (Tecomaria capensis, Bignoniaceae) is a vigorous, evergreen scrambling shrub from southern and south-central Africa, valued for tubular orange-to-apricot flowers borne erratically across much of the year. It reaches about 2-3 m tall and wide as a free-standing shrub, or can be trained much taller on a trellis or wall, and is widely used for informal hedging and as a hot-color border or container plant. It is frost-tender (RHS H1C; roughly USDA 9b-11) - in cooler climates it is grown under glass or as a summer container plant and overwintered indoors. In frost-free, mild climates it can become weedy: it has naturalised and is treated as invasive in parts of Australia and on islands such as the Azores, so site it where suckering and self-layering can be managed. It is not a recognised edible and is not flagged as notably toxic, though several plant parts feature in traditional southern-African medicine; treat it as ornamental rather than for consumption. Note the accepted binomial here is Tecomaria capensis (POWO/GBIF); the widely-seen Tecoma capensis is a synonym.
Shrub
Full sun / Part sun
Moderate water
Zones 9b-11
Climate: narrow
Border
Focal point
Pollinator
Structure
Container
Aloe arborescens
Krantz aloe
Aloe arborescens (Krantz aloe, also candelabra aloe) is a large, multi-headed evergreen succulent shrub from southeastern southern Africa, growing 2-4 m tall with branching stems topped by blue-green rosettes of toothed, recurved leaves. In winter it throws up unbranched, vivid red-orange flower racemes that draw sunbirds, butterflies, and bees, making it a strong structural and pollinator plant for frost-free Mediterranean and subtropical gardens or large containers. It is frost-tender: the RHS rates it H1b (hardy only to about 10-15 C / 50-59 F), so outside roughly USDA zone 9b-11 it must be grown under glass or moved indoors for winter. The RHS flags it as harmful if eaten by people and pets - the bitter yellow leaf latex carries aloin (an anthraquinone laxative/irritant), distinct from the milder clear inner gel used traditionally in folk medicine. It is also noted as locally invasive where conditions are mild (e.g. Portugal), so site it thoughtfully in benign climates. Easily propagated from cuttings, it is widely planted in South Africa as a living security hedge around kraals.
Shrub
Full sun
Low water
Zones 9b-11
Climate: narrow
Structure
Focal point
Pollinator
Container
Agapanthus praecox
African lily
A bold, clump-forming evergreen perennial from South Africa, grown for big rounded umbels of trumpet-shaped blue (or white) flowers held on tall bare stalks above arching, strap-shaped leaves in mid-to-late summer. It is widely sold as "lily of the Nile," but that is a misnomer - the plant is South African (the Cape provinces and KwaZulu-Natal), not from the Nile. Spectacular and easy in warm climates, this evergreen Agapanthus is frost-tender, so in cold-winter areas it is grown in a container and overwintered under cover. The RHS has given several Agapanthus praecox forms its Award of Garden Merit and rates this evergreen species half-hardy (H3 - needs winter protection).
Perennial
Full sun / Part shade
Moderate water
Zones 8a-11
Climate: narrow
Focal point
Border
Container
Pollinator

Educator packet

Plant packet
Trailing abutilon educator packet
A tender, lax, semi-evergreen shrub from subtropical southern Brazil, grown for its distinctive pendent lantern flowers: an inflated bright-red calyx above pale-yellow petals, with a long dark maroon column of stamens dangling beneath. It is not hardy - hard frost kills the top growth - so outside mild, near-frost-free climates it is grown against a warm sunny wall, in a container brought under cover for winter, or as a conservatory plant. Where winters are gentle it flowers over a very long season, summer to autumn in temperate gardens and on and off nearly year-round in frost-free places. POWO (Kew) now files it under the accepted name Callianthe megapotamica, with Abutilon megapotamicum a synonym; it also goes by Brazilian bellflower, flowering maple, and Chinese lantern. The stems are scrambling rather than self-supporting, so it wants training or a place to cascade.
Scientific name
Abutilon megapotamicum
Plant type
shrub
Hardiness
8b-11b
Light
full-sun, part-shade
Moisture
moderate
Spacing
72 inches
Classroom prompts
- Which plant traits are observations, and which are care recommendations?
- How would this plant fit change if the garden location moved warmer, colder, wetter, or drier?
- Which source-backed facts would you cite in a lesson handout?
Use the Sources & citations section below for page citation styles and the field-level source list.

Sources & citations

Cite this page
For lesson plans, articles, or research that uses this page. To cite a single upstream fact instead, use its specific source listed below.
Plotwright. (2026, May 17). Trailing abutilon (Abutilon megapotamicum). Retrieved 2026, July 14, from https://plotwright.com/plants/abutilon-megapotamicum
Sources for every fact
Every fact on this page traces to a source. 18 fields cited - 18 source-backed.
Plants of the World Online (POWO)
Botanical research database
Backs 17 fields
Identity
Summary
Plant type
Light
Moisture
Hardiness
Heat zone
Size
Spacing
Habit
Design roles
Seasonal interest
Growth stages
Lifecycle
Regional guidance
Success tips
Designer notes
Wikimedia Commons
Photo
Backs 1 field
Image
Flora e Funga do Brasil
Botanical research database
RHS Find a Plant
Botanical research database
Wikipedia (ecoregion articles)
Botanical research database